Diversity and Change in Modern India

Economic, Social and Political Approaches

Edited by Anthony F. Heath and Roger Jeffery

Description

India's society, economy, and polity have been transformed at a gathering pace since the early 1990s, and India's growing role on the world stage makes it imperative to understand the roots and consequences of these changes. The 11 papers in this interdisciplinary volume review the growing body of data that help to make sense of these changes and to understand their likely significance.

The volume provides systematic, macro-level studies of economic, demographic, social, and political change in India but also micro-level analyses of the detailed mechanisms 'on the ground' of how Indian society is being re-shaped. This rare combination of micro- and macro-level analyses thus gives a rounded picture not only of national trends but also of the underlying processes of change.

Each of the papers, by leading authorities in each field, showcases the fruits of new, previously unpublished scholarship across the social sciences. For example, Oliver Heath and Yogendra Yadav's paper draws on the remarkable series of election studies from 1967 to 2004 to offer an original picture and analysis of electoral change as India moved from its post-independence to understanding the processes of change and diversity in modern India's period of Congress dominance to its contemporary much more diverse structure. By contrast, the paper by Patricia and Roger Jeffery draws upon intensive village-level fieldwork conducted across 25 years when social welfare services have been transformed under globalizing and liberalizing pressures. By bringing together such contrasting kinds of social science studies, the volume will be a major new contribution to understanding the processes of change and diversity in modern India.

Diversity and Change in Modern India

Economic, Social and Political Approaches

Edited by Anthony F. Heath and Roger Jeffery

Author Information

Anthony F. Heath is Professor of Sociology at Oxford University and Fellow of the British Academy.

Roger Jeffery is Professor of Sociology of South Asia at the University of Edinburgh.

Contributors:

Mukulia Banerjee, University College London Tim Dyson, London School of Economics Dipankar Gupta, Jawaharlal Nehru University Zoya Hasan, Jawaharlal Nehru University Anthony Heath, Oxford University & Fellow of the British Academy Oliver Heath, Royal Holloway, University of London Patricia Jeffrey, University of Edinburgh Roger Jeffrey, University of Edinburgh Vijay Joshi, Oxford University James Manor, University of London Lucia Michelutti, Oxford University Divya Vaid, Yale University Yogendra Yadav, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi